articleJournal of Studies on Alcohol and DrugsJul 1, 2007GREEN OA

Are Social Norms the Best Predictor of Outcomes Among Heavy-Drinking College Students?

University of Washington

PubMed
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Abstract

Objective

This research was designed to evaluate the relative contribution of social norms, demographics, drinking motives, and alcohol expectancies in predicting alcohol consumption and related problems among heavy-drinking college students. METHOD: Participants included 818 (57.6% women) first-year undergraduates who reported at least one heavy-drinking episode in the previous month. In addition to providing demographic information (gender and fraternity/sorority membership) participants completed Web-based assessments of social norms (perceived descriptive norms regarding typical student drinking, injunctive norms regarding friends' and parents' approval), motives (social, enhancement, coping, and conformity), and expectancies and evaluations of positive and negative alcohol effects.

Results

Regression results indicated that descriptive and injunctive norms were among the best predictors of college student drinking. With respect to alcohol problems, results indicated that coping motives accounted for the largest proportion of unique variance. Finally, results revealed that alcohol consumption mediated the relationships between predictors and problems for social norms, whereas coping motives, negative expectancies, and evaluation of negative effects were directly associated with alcohol problems despite having relatively weak or null unique associations with consumption.

Citation impact

657
total citations
FWCI
13.54
Percentile
100%
References
97
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Social norms approach
  • Conformity
  • Psychology
  • Coping (psychology)
  • Social psychology
  • Poison control
  • Human factors and ergonomics
  • Injury prevention
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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